Dig Into the Gitmo Detainee Lawsuits

This chart contains documents and information about the 53 Guantanamo detainees whose lawsuits seeking freedom have been decided by federal judges. More than 50 similar lawsuits are pending.

Thirty-eight of the men were found to be eligible for release, but one man’s victory was reversed when the government appealed. Sixteen detainees have lost their cases. Of the 37 men now judged to be unlawfully imprisoned, 13 remain in indefinite detention, in some cases while the government appeals the rulings. (Their names are in red.) Each has been held at Guantanamo for seven years or longer. Detainees who’ve lost their cases have appealed all but the most recent decisions, but they still have time to file challenges to those new rulings.

The detainees’ Internment Serial Numbers link to entries in the New York Times’ Guantanamo Docket, which contains records originally considered by the military in deciding to detain these men. (Note: The spellings vary by news outlet. We’ve used the spellings given in the federal court dockets.)

The government accused Mingazov of joining a terrorist group associated with al-Qaida or the Taliban and receiving military training from al-Qaida.

Judge granted the detainee's habeas petition on May 13, 2010. Mingazov remains held at Guantanamo, while the government appeals the decision.

The judge rejected the government's case, which rested largely on the detainee's interrogation statements, because the detainee had probably incriminated himself only due to threats he'd otherwise be returned to dangerous circumstances in Russia. The statements were also uncorroborated and full of errors, according to the judge.

The government asserted that Odaini was a part of al-Qaida because he was arrested at a guesthouse allegedly connected to the terrorist network.

Judge granted habeas petition on May 26, 2010. Odaini was sent back to Yemen July 13.

The judge said the evidence "overwhelmingly" supported Odaini's claim that he was a student not affiliated with al-Qaida, who visited the suspect guesthouse for the first time the night he was arrested. U.S. officials themselves had said, numerous times since 2002, that Odaini didn't belong at Guantanamo, the judge noted.

The court's opinion, explaining both sides' positions and discussing the evidence, isn't yet public. But the government alleged in military proceedings that Latif was an al-Qaida fighter who traveled to Afghanistan to battle U.S. forces.

Judge granted habeas petition on July 21, 2010. Latif remains held at Guantanamo.

The court's opinion discussing the evidence isn't yet public. But in a brief order announcing the result, Judge Kennedy told the government to "take all necessary and appropriate diplomatic steps to
facilitate Latif’s release forthwith" and report back on Aug. 20.